Thursday, September 13, 2007
Reading
Most people amount to very little, which we should think about, since each of us have great potential to amount to very little as well. One of the core values of reading lies in it's role as a behavioral catalyst. I know we end up making so little of our lives because we don't treat ourselves like mechanisms. What is the generic cycle of man? He lives, he acquires knowledge, he develops aspirations, he realizes they are difficult to achieve, he ceases to pursue his aspirations, he feels a lack of internal consistency, he becomes depressed, he gains resolve, he sets goals, he is enthusiastic, then he again realizes that his aspirations will be quite difficult to achieve and continues to shrink into a weak, underwhelming specimen. What, therefore, is the alternate direction man can take in order to disrupt the venomous inertia that slowly leads him to meaninglessness? Catalytic Introspection. Man must concentrate and persist in order to explicitly understand his intrinsic aspirations and the most powerful motivations that stimulate his mind and body to break through the alleged difficulties and complexities of creating a strategy, setting things in motion, and generating and perpetuating momentum through attainment. I have found that reading, in various forms, provides the most vast and most intense fonts of the aforementioned motivation. Catalytic Introspection and Reading.
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